Friday, November 1, 2024

Fall on the North Yuba River

Fall Willows on the North Yuba River - 10/31/24

The recent rainfall coupled with cooler temperatures, and less hours of daylight , have caused the North Yuba River Canyon to show its Fall colors! Without the rainfall, a lot of the leaves would have just dried up and turned brown. Luckily they didn't, and the canyon is alive with the yellows and oranges of autumn leaves!

During the growing season, chlorophyll is continually being produced and broken down and leaves appear green. In early autumn, in response to the shortening days and declining intensity of sunlight, chlorophyll production slows down, stops, and eventually all chlorophyll is destroyed. The colorful yellow (xanthophylls) and orange (carotenoids) pigments that are present in the leaf, are then unmasked and show their colors. The red and purple pigments (anthocyanins) are manufactured from the sugars that are trapped in the leaf. These pigments are what cause the vivid color changes in leaves!

Willows on the North Yuba River - Salix sp.

Willows grow along a lot of the shoreline of the North Yuba River.
At this time of the year, they are one of the main plants that are vibrant yellow in color. I just love their silken reflections!

The beautifully colored Fall leaves don't last forever. As the days shorten and temperatures drop, not only do the leaves change color, but a process called "abscission" begins. The leaves don't just fall off the tree, they are actually being pushed off the tree by the tree itself! As Fall progresses a layer of cells, known as the abscission layer, starts to grow between the end of the leaf stalk and the twig supporting it. These cells slowly grow and cut the leaf off from the tree without leaving an open wound.

Indian Rhubarb on the North Yuba River - Darmera peltata

Indian Rhubarb grows along rocky streams and river beds throughout the Sierra, up to 6,600' in elevation. The leaves are huge, up to 2' wide, and the leaf stalks can be 1-3' tall! They grow from rhizomes that hug the underwater rocks. In fall, the leaves turn yellow-orange and sometimes a lovely salmon pink in color! They are one of my absolute favorite river plants

American Dipper with Indian Rhubarb in the background 
Cinclus mexicanus - Darmera peltata

American Dippers live year-round on the North Yuba River. I wonder if they enjoy the fall colors like I do! I know they can see the fall color changes. In fact, birds see many more colors than humans! Humans can see red, blue, and green, and colors and shades made from combinations of these. Birds, however, are able to perceive the familiar rainbow of colors we know and parts of the ultraviolet(UV) spectrum that we can’t see. The following information is from the website at https://northamericannature.com/can-birds-see-color/.

"Bird vision is also sharper than humans. Birds can distinguish small differences between similar shades, so they can see colors that we can’t. Birds generally have four types of cones in their eyes instead of three like humans, and they perceive color differently. Not all birds have four cones, but birds normally have more cones in their retinas than humans and other mammals.

Each cone in the retina has a drop of oil in it. This oil filters out different colors, allowing the birds to see different shades, much like a camera filter. The oil is either transparent, pale, or red, or yellow and gives them greater contrast between colors. This helps birds filter out leaves, bushes, and trees to find their prey, and can even help them find fish in deep water. Mammals, including ourselves, do not have this oil in their eyes.

Humans can see one non-spectral color, purple. We can see purple when our blue and red cones are stimulated. Scientists believe that birds can see up to five: purple, ultraviolet and purple ultraviolet and green, ultraviolet and red, and ultraviolet and yellow."

American Mink - Neovision vision

To our TOTAL surprise, we spotted an American Mink in the North Yuba last week!  I hadn't seen a Mink in the river for five years!!!  It was initially standing on a rock in the middle of the river, then it dove in and resurfaced several times! WOW!!! It looked to be good-sized, maybe over 2 feet in length! We got to watch it for about a minute before it disappeared!!! How exciting! What a thrill! Fingers crossed that we see it again in the near future!

American Mink - Neovision vision

Minks aren't seen that often because they are mainly nocturnal, and are especially active at dawn and dusk. They are called "aquatic weasels" because they can pursue prey underwater. They eat muskrats, crayfish, frogs, ducks, waterfowl, and fish, in rivers, streams, ponds, and lakes. They can swim a distance of 100' underwater, and can dive to a depth of 15'!!! They also hunt on land and eat shrews, mice, and rabbits. They are mainly solitary, except briefly during mating. Both males and females are polygynandrous, and have multiple mates. Mating takes place in the winter. The female makes the nesting burrow in the bank of a stream, river, or lake and lines it with grasses and the fur from prey. 1-8 young are born sometime between April and May. The female solely feeds and cares for the young. American Minks are native to North America. They live in every state in the U.S. except for Arizona!

Coastal Rainbow Trout - Onchorhynchus mykiss irideus

Right now the river water clarity is extreme! I was able to catch this photo of a Coastal Rainbow Trout from our bridge! Adult trout can be 18-20" in length. The one pictured above was probably around 15" long! Right now the river is a chilly 42 degrees! Being coldblooded, trout become less active when the the water temperature drops below 40 degrees. Their metabolism and respiratory rates slow down. Adult trout usually stay in deep pools during fall and winter. 

View through the Cottonwoods of the Sierra Buttes 
from Salmon Creek Campground

Autumn in the Lakes Basin

The Aspen leaves have finally changed color in the Lakes Basin!  A week ago they were still mainly green! My friend Nancy and I decided to take a hike in the Lakes Basin to check out some of our favorite areas for Fall color. 
 
Black Cottonwoods - Populus balsamifera ssp. trichocarpa

The Salmon Creek Campground borders an incredibly beautiful, dryish, tangled wetland. It has small creeks and meadows, as well as Dogwoods, Cottonwoods, Aspens, Junipers and Pines. The grasses are long and thick, currently blanketed in Cottonwood leaves, and lying on the ground. So of course we had to lie down on the grasses, and watch the overhead cottonwood trees drop their leaves one by one! Such beauty!

Gray's Lovage seedhead - Ligusticum grayi

 In the summer, thousands of wildflowers bloom there. Now, in the fall, the wildflower seedheads bring a new delicate beauty to the area!

Quaking Aspens & American Dogwood
Populus tremuloides - Cornus sericea

The Lakes Basin Campground has a short trail through a beautiful, small Aspen Grove that is glorious at this time of year!  In addition to the incredible fall colors, the sound of the aspen leaves in the wind is music to our ears!

Quaking Aspens & American Dogwood
Populus tremuloides - Cornus sericea

The contrast of yellow Aspens and red Dogwoods is a familiar beauty here in the Fall!

A distant view of the Aspen Grove from the campground bridge

Aspens, grasses, willows, dogwoods, and currants are just a few of the plants that have "blossomed" with color this fall!

Dwarf Bilberry in Bilberry Basin - Vaccinium cespitosum

On the Round Lake Loop Trail, there is a basin between Silver and Round Lakes that is filled with water in the spring. In the fall it is bone dry and showcases brilliantly colored Dwarf Bilberry plants!  We hike there every year just to see the bright-red Dwarf Bilberry. The color is amazingly beautiful! The photo above is of front-lit Dwarf Bilberry. 

Dwarf Bilberry in Bilberry Basin - Vaccinium cespitosum

The photo above is of back-lit Dwarf Bilberry plants! The leaves are brilliant fire-engine-red in the sun!  It's astonishing every time I see it!  We were so lucky to see them at their peak color! Such Beauty!

Round Lake

Just past Bilberry Basin is Round Lake. We decided to have lunch on the sunny shore in the wind and it was fabulous! Surrounded by beauty, with a fall chill in the air, and in the company of a dear friend...who could ask for more?


Have any mushrooms popped up?

Have the Black Oaks turned fall colors yet?

Check back in two weeks to find the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of November 16th. See you then!

Also, check out my latest post on my newly re-opened Damp Earth Blog at dampearthart.blogspot.com

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!

Thursday, October 31, 2024

In the Spirit!


Whether you celebrate Halloween or not,
let nature enchant you every day!
Happy Halloween!

Saturday, October 19, 2024

Conifer Tree Trunk Fungi!

 
Conifer trunk covered in Wolf Lichen - Letharia vulpina

Lichens

Bright yellow-green Wolf Lichen is commonly seen on the trunks of conifers in the Lakes Basin. It is not a plant, but rather a fungus and algae or cyanobacteria living together in mutualistic symbiosis.  The fungus makes the shape of the lichen and provides water and minerals to the algae/cyanobacteria. Inside the fungus, the algae/cyanobacteria photosynthesize sugars, provide vitamins, and make amino acids from the nitrogen gas in the air! Surprisingly, lichen is not a plant (has no roots nor vascular system) and is classified in the fungal kingdom!  Lichens provide food, cover, and nesting materials for a variety of birds, mammals and insects.

Steller's Jay foraging on Wolf Lichen - Cyanocitta stelleri

Many insects, live on, camouflage themselves as, or eat lichens, including beetles, moths, moth larvae, spiders, mites, and grasshoppers. In turn, many birds prey on these insects, such as the Steller's Jay pictured above.

Chipmunk - Tamias sp.

I didn't find any source that said Chipmunks eat lichens. However, I did find out that they will sometimes use them as nesting material!

Northern Flying Squirrel - Glaucomys sabrinus
photo credit: US Fish & Wildlife

On the other hand 90-100% of a Northern Flying Squirrel's diet is fungi and lichen. I would imagine that they eat lichen in the winter, when it is limp from rain and snow. They primarily eat underground fungi, such as false-truffles and truffles. They mainly consume this fungi  in the summer, when the ground isn't covered in several feet of snow.

Cryptic Globe Fungus - Cryptoporus volvatus

Fungi

Mushrooms are also commonly seen on the trunks of conifers.  They usually indicate that the tree isn't healthy. The spores of the fungi are usually brought into the tree trunk on the bodies of wood boring beetles. The following information from https://woodlandinfo.org/, explains what happens next.

"Once inside the bark of a tree, the spores start to grow on some part of the tree; or the cells are slowly killed and decayed by the fungus; or the fungal growth spreads to the vascular system; the system becomes “clogged” due to dead cells and can no longer transport sugar and water.

If enough of the vascular system gets clogged up, then the tree will literally be choked to death. Sometimes trees can contain the infection to only part of their system and so can continue to grow but at a slower pace."

Grub in a Cryptic Globe Fungus

The mushrooms that we see on the bark of a conifer are the "fruiting bodies" of the main fungus, and produce the spores needed for the reproduction of the fungus. These mushrooms can be eaten by mammals, birds, and insects alike! And of course, the insects in the mushrooms are eaten by birds!

Sulfur Shelf - Laetiporus conifericola

There are countless species of mushrooms in the woods.  Lots of them grow on the ground, while others pop-up on the trunks of trees.  Here are a few of the ones I've seen.

Oyster Mushrooms - West Coast Reishi
Genus Pleurotus- Ganoderma oregonense

Common Mergansers - Mergus merganser

Recent Departures, Short Layovers,
& New Arrivals!

In my neighborhood the migratory birds have departed and our avian winter visitors have arrived!  I love seeing the changes! Many of them migrate long distances to their winter habitat, while others are short distance migrants and overwinter in California. 

I haven't seen any Common Mergansers on the river for several weeks now. They raised their young here, and have probably left for their winter habitat in southern California or Arizona.

Western Tanager (juvenile) - Black-headed Grosbeak (juvenile)
Piranga ludoviciana - Pheucticus melanocephalus

Juvenile Western Tanagers, that were born here, left our neighborhood several weeks ago, to begin their migration south to their winter habitat in southern Mexico/Central America, a distance of nearly 4,000 miles!

The juvenile Black-headed Grosbeaks, also born here, left several weeks ago on their annual migration to their winter habitat in southern Baja California, a distance of approximately 1,500 miles!

Lewis's Woodpecker - Melanerpes lewis
 
To my delight a juvenile Lewis's Woodpecker stopped briefly in our neighborhood a few weeks ago!!!  I had never seen a juvenile before! Apparently it was on its way to its winter habitat in the foothills and lower elevations of California!

Western Meadowlark (non-breeding adults) - Sturnella neglecta

Every year Western Meadowlarks pass through our neighborhood in the Spring and again in the Fall. My theory is that they are on their way to Sierra Valley to breed in the Spring, and on their way to their winter habitat in the foothills or central valley in the Fall. They are such beautifully feathered birds!

White-crowned Sparrows (1st winter - adult) - Zonotrichia leucophrys

3 weeks ago we saw a bunch of White-crowned Sparrows up in the Lakes Basin, now they're down in our neighborhood!  They will spend the winter here foraging for seeds. The adults have the distinctive black and white crown, whereas the "first winter" birds have a rusty-red crown. I always delight in their return!

Golden-crowned Sparrow (1st winter) - Zonotrichia atricapilla

The Golden-crowned Sparrows will also spend the winter here. They migrate down from their breeding grounds in Alaska and/or northwestern Canada. Like most birds, they forage for seeds in the winter.

Ruby-crowned Kinglet (adult) - Corthylio calendula

Having spent the summer in the higher elevations of the Sierra, the Ruby-crowned Kinglets descend to our neighborhood, and lower, for the winter. Here they will glean a variety insects off of shrubs all winter long. I have only once seen their startling "ruby" crown,  but wasn't able to get a photo. These tiny (4" in length) birds are difficult to photograph as they flit through the bare-leaved shrubs!  Sometimes I get a lucky shot!

Great Basin Wood-nymph - Northern White Skipper
Cercyonis sthenele silvestris -Heliopetes ericetorum
 
Down in our garden there are still tons of pollinators and butterflies. The two  above are ones I have never seen before! The following information about the butterfly and skipper pictured above, is from https://www.butterfliesandmoths.org/species/

"Great Basin Wood-nymph: Males patrol all day to find females, who lay eggs singly on host plants. Caterpillars hatch and go into hibernation, not feeding until the following spring.
Flight: One brood from June-August.
Caterpillar Hosts: Unknown grasses.
Adult Food: Flower nectar.
Habitat: Chaparral, oak woodland, open pine forest, juniper-pinyon woodland, sagebrush.

Northern White Skipper: To find females, males patrol in canyon bottoms. Females deposit eggs singly on young leaves of the host plants. Caterpillars feed on leaves and live in shelters of rolled or tied leaves.
Flight: Several broods from April-October.
Caterpillar Hosts: Various mallows including globemallows, hollyhock, and mallow.
Adult Food: Flower nectar.
Habitat: Open woodland, chaparral, dry washes, desert mountains, arid land."

Saddleback obscured by rain and clouds

Stormy Weather!

On Wednesday and Thursday this past week, we got .30" of rain and the clouds were unbelievable dark and stormy on Thursday afternoon! Such beauty!  Hopefully more rain will arrive again soon!


What do the Fall colors look like in the Lakes Basin?

Have the Sandhill Cranes migrated through?

Check back in two weeks to find the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of November 2nd. See you then! 

 Also, check out my latest post on my newly re-opened Damp Earth Blog at dampearthart.blogspot.com

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!

Friday, October 11, 2024

Close to Home


Indian Rhubarb in the Fall - Darmera peltata

My husband's health has been the priority these past ten days, and I haven't been able to work on my blog. Luckily, we have successfully made it through a medical crisis and all is well right now! Yay!!! I hope to post a blog a week from now, on Saturday, October 19th. So check back then for more natural history news from my neighborhood!


If you have some spare time, check out my Damp Earth blog at dampearthart.blogspot.com. I started it in 2018 and kept it going until 2021.  Since it definitely feels like a drought is here once again, I'll be restarting this blog next week!  In the meantime check out all the photos, art, and writing that's in it from years past!

Friday, September 27, 2024

Conifer Tree Trunks Continued!

 
Black-backed Woodpecker nest with a "plate" surrounding the nest hole

In the Lakes Basin, dead or diseased conifer trunks are the homes of several birds (mainly woodpeckers) and mammals. Nest holes are much easier to excavate in these types of trees, as the wood is much softer than a living tree. All woodpeckers are cavity nesters. They make their cavities in tree trunks, dead branches, stubs, or even stumps! Typically, woodpeckers excavate a new nest every year, and old nests are not reused. However, abandoned woodpecker nests are often inhabited by owls, chickadees, nuthatches, blue birds, Douglas Squirrels, Flying Squirrels, and sometimes even Pine Martens! 
 
Black-backed Woodpecker (male) - Picoides arcticus

The nest hole in the first photo was created by Black-backed Woodpeckers. They will occasionally peel off the bark around the nest hole (creating a "plate"), which exposes the sticky sap beneath it. This exposed sap is a deterrent to predators, such as tree-climbing snakes. These woodpeckers usually build their nests in dead conifers, but sometimes nest in live ones.

White-headed Woodpecker (male) - Picoides albolarvatus

White-headed Woodpeckers usually nest in dead conifer trunks. They are also known to nest in dead stumps, as well as leaning or fallen logs.

Downy Woodpecker - Dryobates pubescens

Downy Woodpeckers usually nest in the trunks of dead conifers and deciduous trees, or the dead parts of live trees. Sometimes they will excavate a nest in a small stub that leans away from vertical, with the entrance hole to the nest on the underside of the stub.

Red- breasted Sapsucker - Sphyrapicus ruber

Red-breasted Sapsuckers nest in dead conifers or deciduous trees, 
or in the dead parts of live trees.

Northern Flicker - Colaptes auratus

The Northern Flicker is a woodpecker but has different behavior than most woodpeckers. They mainly forage on the ground, not on tree trunks, for ants and other insects by probing and hammering in the soil. They usually nest in dead or diseased tree trunks and large branches, preferring mainly aspens. Unlike other woodpeckers, flickers will reuse an old nest. 

Red-breasted Nuthatch (male) at nest hole - Sitta canadensis
photo ©Mia McPherson of onthewingphotography.com

Much like woodpeckers, Red-breasted Nuthatches excavate their nests in dead trees. It takes a male and female pair, 18 days to chisel and hammer out a nest! They will sometimes reuse one of their old nests, or even an old woodpecker nest! 

Brown Creeper (adult) at nest site - Certhia americana
photo ©Doug Backlund of wildphotosphotography.com

Brown Creepers make their hammock-like nests behind a loose plank of bark on the trunk of a tree. The nests are made out of mosses, lichens, grasses, and feathers. Adults roost outside all year long, often by squeezing in a crack or scar in some bark. Sometimes they roost together in small groups on a tree trunk that is sheltered by other trees. 

Tree Swallow (adult) - Tachycineta bicolor

Tree Swallows readily nest in old woodpecker nests, 
as well as natural tree cavities.

Northern Flying Squirrel ©nature.ca/en/ - Glaucomys sabrinus

Northern Flying Squirrels will nest in tree hollows, abandoned woodpecker nests, and hollow stumps or limbs. They are strictly nocturnal and are rarely seen. 90%-100% of their diet is underground fungi and lichen! They don't truly "fly". They "glide" from trees and branches to the ground.  I've never seen one of these beautiful little animals, but I would love to! 

American Marten ©carnivora.net - Martes americana

American Martens can live in a tree hollow, rock den, fallen log, squirrel's nest or even a woodpecker's nest! They forage in the early morning, late afternoon, and at night, on the ground and up in the tree canopy. I've only seen an American Marten once in my lifetime!  It was on the High Sierra Trail in Sequoia National Park, in the late afternoon. I was backpacking up to a lake, and as I came around a bend in the trail there was a lone American Marten in view! We locked eyes for just a few seconds and then it was gone, but I'll never forget it!

Douglas Squirrel or Chickaree - Tamiasciurus douglasii

 In the summer, Douglas Squirrels will make a nest for their young out of mosses, lichens, twigs and shredded bark. In the winter an adult will live in a woodpecker hole or natural hole in a tree.  American Martens are one of its main predators.

Western Gray Squirrel - Sciurus griseus

In the summer, Western Gray Squirrels make nests out of shredded bark and sticks, usually about 20' above the ground in a tree.  In the winter, they probably live in natural tree cavities. 
 
Wolf Lichen - Letharia vulpina

In my next blog I'll talk about the plants that live on tree trunks.  Check back on  10/12/24 to learn about what lives in, and what eats, these plants!

un-named pond

Lakes Basin Update!

In the past month and a half, I've been able to hike in the Lakes Basin four times. Each time I hiked into a different area, and it was all fabulous! The pond pictured above was totally new to me, and we were there on a glorious, cloudy-blue-sky day! I feel so privileged to have been there! Such Beauty!!!

view to the northwest of Mt. Elwell 

On the way to the pond we had beautiful views to the north and west!

Frog - Wax Currant - unknown galls on Tobacco Brush
Rana sp. - Ribes cereum -  galls on Ceanothus velutinus

The Sierra Buttes

It was such a memorable day, filled with clouds and beauty everywhere! 

Sierra Tiger Beetle - The Sierra Buttes - Leathery Grapefern
 Cicindela tranquebarica ssp. sierra- Septricium multifidum

Lower Salmon Lake

On another day, my husband and I hiked to Lower Salmon Lake. On the way we had a lovely view of the Sierra Buttes, ran into a few bright green Sierra Tiger Beetles, and found a patch of unusual Leathery Grapeferns!

Lower Salmon Lake
 
Long Lake from the Pacific Crest Trail - inset photo: Ospreys
Pandion haliaetus

Up on the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT)

My friend Nancy and I also hiked up to the PCT on a slightly smokey day about a month ago.  At the ridge top, we lucked out and saw a pair of adult Ospreys flying overhead! In some areas there were thousands of ripening Bitter Cherries! We also saw several immature Mountain Bluebirds that day. Our time in the Lakes Basin is always treasured!

Immature Mountain Bluebirds - Bitter Cherries
Sialia currucoides - Prunus emarginata

Mt. Elwell 

Part of the Round Lake Trail

On another day my husband and I walked out the Round Lake Trail about a mile and a half to a view of Mt. Elwell! It was another gorgeous cloud-filled day, and White-crowned Sparrows posed for us on the tops of bushes, while lofty Blue Elderberries beckoned!


White-crownes Sparrows (adults) - Elderberries
Zonotrichia leucophrys - Sambucus mexicana

We got about a tenth of an inch of rain last week!  It came in two different downpours that lasted less than an hour each.  Everything was refreshed and glistening!  Hopefully more rain will come again soon!

Are there any fall colors happening?

What's happening in the river?

Check back in two weeks to find the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of October 12th. See you then!

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!